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Nursing Informatics
Study Guide
Juliana J. Brixey PhD, MPH, MSN, RN
Associate Professor
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
Principal/Owner
J3Brixey Consulting, LLC
Jack E. Brixey MS, MT(ASCP)
Principal/Owner
J3Brixey Consulting, LLC
Houston, Texas
Virginia K. Saba, EdD, RN, FAAN, FACMI
CEO and President
SabaCare, Inc.
Arlington, Virginia
Distinguished Scholar, Emeritus
Georgetown University
Washington, District of Columbia
Professor, Adjunct
Uniformed Services University
Bethesda, Maryland
Kathleen A. McCormick, PhD, RN, FAAN, FACMI, FHIMSS
Principal/Owner
SciMind, LLC
North Potomac, Maryland
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Preface vii Part 5 — Advanced Nursing Informatics in
Practice 295
Part 1 — Nursing Informatics Technologies 1
23 Structuring Advanced Practice Knowledge:
1 Historical Perspective of Nursing Informatics • 3 An Internet Resource for Education and
2 Computer Hardware • 11 Practice • 297
3 Advanced Hardware and mHealth • 25 24 Nursing Informatics in Retail Clinics • 307
4 Computer Software • 33 25 Care Delivery Across the Care Continuum:
Hospital–Community–Home • 317
5 Open Source and Free Software • 47
26 Foundation of a Nursing Plan of Care Standard • 329
6 Data and Data Processing • 65
27 Computerized Provider Order Entry • 341
7 Health Data Standards: Development, Harmonization,
and Interoperability • 73 28 Physiological Monitoring and Device Interface • 351
8 Standardized Nursing Terminologies • 87 29 Health Information Technology: Striving to Improve
Patient Safety • 361
9 Human–Computer Interaction • 99
30 The Role of Technology in the Medication-Use
10 Trustworthy Systems for Safe and Private
Process • 371
Healthcare • 111
31 The Magnet Model • 391
Part 2 — System Life Cycle 127
32 Public Health Practice Applications • 397
11 System Life Cycle: A Framework • 129
33 Informatics Solutions for Emergency Planning
12 System and Functional Testing • 153 and Response • 409
13 System Life Cycle Tools • 163 34 Federal Healthcare Sector Nursing Informatics • 419
14 Healthcare Project Management • 171 35 Consumer/Patient Engagement and eHealth
Resources • 433
Part 3 — Informatics Theory Standards—
Foundations of Nursing Informatics 181 Part 6 — Nursing Informatics—Complex
Applications 443
15 The Practice Specialty of Nursing Informatics • 183
36 Healthcare Analytics • 445
16 Nursing Informatics and Healthcare Policy • 205
37 Planning, Design, and Implementation of
Part 4 — Nursing Informatics Leadership 229 Information Technology in Complex Healthcare
Systems • 455
17 The Role of the Nurse Executive in Information
Technology Decision Making • 231 38 The Quality Spectrum in Informatics • 465
18 Establishing Nursing Informatics in Public Policy • 241 39 Translation of Evidence into Nursing Practice • 479
19 Communication Skills in Health IT, Building 40 Improving Healthcare Quality and Patient Outcomes
Strong Teams for Successful Health IT Outcomes • 253 Through the Integration of Evidence-Based
Practice and Informatics • 493
20 Assessing the Vendors • 261
41 Incorporating Evidence: Use of Computer-Based
21 Nurse Scheduling and Credentialing Systems • 275
Clinical Decision Support Systems for Health
22 Informatics and the Healthcare Industry • 285 Professionals • 505
v